CHAMBERSBURG - A Wayensboro woman will spend three months in jail and agreed to pay back more than $660,000 to her former employer after pleading guilty to stealing from the business while she worked there.

Tiffany Jo Brown, 35, was sentenced Wednesday to three months in jail, followed by six months on electronic monitoring, then 39 months under regular supervision.

Brown pleaded guilty to one count of theft by failure to make required disposition of funds, with nearly 400 similar counts being dismissed in the plea agreement.

Brown had been working at Zody's Moving and Storage, 11737 Wharf Road in Washington Township, for 15 years when the owner became suspicious of Brown in April 2015, according to court documents.

Brown had access to the businesses accounts and received checks issued to the business, and the owner came to believe that she was taking the checks issued to the company, signed his name to them and took them to an ATM to despite them in her name.

Invoices for all the checks taken from the company were stamped as paid and filed, according to court documents. However, the bank showed that Brown had an account between January 2012 and April 2014 with 291 checks made out to Zody's Moving and Storage that appeared to be signed by the owner, but were deposited into Browns' account.

In all, Brown had deposited $663,501.95 into her account, according to court documents.

Brown told Washington Township Police during the investigation that she had made a "big mistake" and she was the only one responsible for the theft.

Brown will be required to pay back all the money, in full, per her sentence ordered Wednesday. Brown said she will pay back whatever she can, at her current job with Waynesboro's Record Herald newspaper.

No one from Zody's Moving and Storage was present for the sentencing hearing, but had previously discussed the impact of Brown's actions at an earlier hearing.

Franklin County Judge Angela Krom told Brown that she could only imagine how difficult it would be to operate a small business, but knew that it had a "profound effect" on them.

"I think you can understand how you affect the business," Krom told her, noting the extended length of time she worked for them.

Along with the restitution and jail time, Brown is prohibited from consuming alcohol, controlled substances, or possessing firearms.